Starring Corey (THE LOST BOYS) Haim, Gary (PREDATOR 2) Busey, Everett (QUEST FOR FIRE) McGill, Megan Follows and Terry (THE STEPFATHER) O’Quinn, this 80s-tastic film was directed by Dan Attias. This remains the only feature film directed by Attias, who continues to work for primetime television.
US poster
Set in the rural town of Tarker’s Mills (in Maine, of course), SILVER BULLET’s script was written by Stephen King, and is an adaptation of his novella Cycle of the Werewolf.
Gary Busey!
This movie remains an enjoyable watch: Gary Busey is likeable as Uncle Red and Everett McGill is good as Reverend Lowe, who turns into a werewolf that is partial to beating some victims to death with baseball bats!
A werewolf with a baseball bat! Eek!
SILVER BULLET is a very ‘1980s’ film, and I mean that in a good way, boasting some memorable moments, including the sequence where the werewolf picks off people from beneath billowing fog.
Australian VHS sleeve
Let’s talk now about the hirsute antagonist… Carlo Rambaldi’s cheesy werewolf transformation effects, let’s face it, aren’t in the same league as Baker or Bottin, but – and I don’t really know why – I quite like the ‘Big Bad Wolf’/bear look of the critter. Go figure.
Grrrrr…
Yeah, okay: this ain’t the most realistic werewolf to ever stalk the silver screen
At one point the disabled kid hero (zipping around in a souped-up wheelchair/motorbike) shoots the werewolf in the eye with a firework. It’s a cool moment. But I have always wondered whether this would really permanently harm a wolfman, because presumably he can only really be hurt with a silver bullet? Never mind, I guess the reason this wounding remains permanent in the story is because it serves as an important plot point, allowing our young hero to note that Reverend Lowe has lost an eye just like the werewolf, thus tipping the kid off regarding the beast’s alter ego…
Rocket in the eye!
Everett McGill as the Reverend
Interestingly, producer Dino De Laurentiis originally offered the project to Don Coscarelli to direct. Coscarelli wrote a version of the script, but ended up quitting, for various reasons, leaving me to wonder what this werewolf film would’ve been like if it had been made by the guy responsible for PHANTASM, THE BEASTMASTER and BUBBA HO-TEP? I think it would’ve been pretty damn good – but we’ll never know. Shame.
Okay, here are some posters for the movie…
UK quad poster
German poster
Spanish poster
Italian poster
Finally, here’s a privately commissioned screen print by graphic designer and illustrator Matt Ryan…
Oxford professor Rex Shepherd stays at an out of the way hotel in a secluded English coastal spot. During his stay he follows the directions contained in a mysterious book, venturing over to a Roman temple, which turns out to be a ruined Roman pet cemetery. Here he discovers an old chest hidden within a wall – and inside the chest he finds a leather, bone-shaped artefact, which he takes back to his hotel room. After deciphering the latin written on the artefact, he squeezes the object, making it squeak like some kind of ancient dog toy. Now Rex Shepherd will soon find out that something is going to come out to play…
It’s won a few awards now – cool!
The journey begins……and it starts off so pleasantly for Rex Shepherd
Inspired by the works of M.R. James, SQUEAK AND I’LL RUN TO YOU is a parody of those ghost stories, especially the tale ‘Oh, Whistle, and I’ll Come to You, My Lad’.
You will enjoy this tale!
What I like about this short is that director (and writer) James Head has created a story that is both a parody of the M.R. James-style ghost stories and is also a caring recreation of the kind of well-loved BBC ghost story adaptations that were produced in the 1970s.
William Fitzgerald plays the story’s protagonist Rex Shepherd straight, as the kind of rather arrogant, dusty academic seen in many M.R. James adaptations. Director Head (who, amongst other things, is also the movie’s cinematographer, producer and editor) plays the hotel owner Albert Bassett as a kind of slightly creepy Bill Bailey, adding most of the low key humour to the tale. Tony Stansfield is also fine, as the local vicar, revealed to be a ghost.
William Fitzgerald and James HeadTony Stansfield
The BBC ghost story adaptations this short most reminds me of are 1968’s WHISTLE AND I’LL COME TO YOU (of course) and A WARNING TO THE CURIOUS from 1972. Like those productions, SQUEAK AND I’LL RUN TO YOU doesn’t rush its plot: it is a slow burn tale, with atmospheric shots of the protagonist striding across deserted beaches, etc.
Love this shot: like something straight out of a BBC M.R. James adaptation!
Set in the 1950s and shot in black & white, SQUEAK AND I’LL RUN TO YOU is lovely to look at. Head uses superimposed stormy clouds in many scenes, and these shots of clouds scudding past the hotel’s roof & tower evoke the kind of process shots seen in Corman’s series of Poe films. The scenes set at the Roman ruins use scale model effects and, though obviously looking like special effects shots, these sequences add a moody, quirky artifice to the film.
The hotel exterior
Okay, time to talk about the supernatural creature that Rex Shepherd unwittingly summons… it is a ghostly, bandaged demon-dog! Yes – this spirit is a small, dark, mangy passed on pooch that drools gooey saliva!
The Prof wakes up to find THIS on his chest!
I love this critter!
The cadaverous canine is brought to the screen using an articulated puppet dog (built by Fitzgerald) that is rotten-looking, bandaged, with exposed ribs and dribbling jaws. As is fitting for a story that deals with ghosts but also names all the characters after breeds of dog, this spectral hound is equal parts nasty and somehow cute (in a grim kind of way!)
Grrrrrrr….
The many ‘No Pets’ signs in the hotel are a nice touch and there’s also a memorable shot of a steaming pile of spectral doggy do! So, all in all, this movie is a great way to pass 69 minutes of your time.
Rex Shepherd discovers there is no escaping this ghost hound!
Finally, here are some behind the scenes shots of the demon dog puppet…
This heroic adventure yarn, about a young farmer who protects a princess from a sorcerer’s monsters in Middle Ages Cornwall, was directed by Nathan Juran, stars Kerwin Mathews, Torin Thatcher, Judi Meredith and Walter Burke, with colourful stop-motion effects provided by Jim Danforth (and others).
A cool view looking down at the giant called Cormoran!I love the moody, low lighting in this shot
The film was producer Edward Small’s attempt to emulate the success of Ray Harryhausen’s THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD, so he used the same director and employed the actors who had played the hero and villain in the Sinbad movie (Mathews and Thatcher).
Torin Thatcher is sorcerer Pendragon (Boo! Hiss!) and Kerwin Mathews is Jack (Hooray!)
Many stop-motion fans see this movie simply as a poor man’s version of THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD, but I really like this fantasy tale!
JACK THE GIANT KILLER’s stop-motion models are cruder in design compared to those seen in Ray Harryhausen films, that’s not in doubt, and the film has more of a pantomime feel to it compared to Ray’s Sinbad films, but I think the movie is nonetheless an enjoyable, memorable adventure.
The creatures include the horned giant Cormoran, a two-headed giant, a tentacled sea monster and a heraldic-looking dragon. There are also ‘dragon men’ (guys in suits) who disappear when struck with a special whip, plus various witches & demons (actors in costumes) and a leprechaun played by Don Beddoe.
Two-headed giant vs sea creature!
The tentacled thingy wins!
The ‘dragon men’ march towards Jack
Villain Pendragon lives up to his name and transforms into a dragon!
For a kids film it’s quite creepy in places: the ‘doll’ gift that suddenly grows into a giant, scenes of women becoming possessed and the glowing witches/demons that attack the ship are all kinda scary. There’s one witch with empty eye sockets, carrying flowers, that’s especially eerie!
This is pretty scary for kids!
Possessed lady of the court with snake eyes!
This witch-thing can blow powerful gusts of wind from its huge mouth!
Eek!
The heroine turns bad! Oh no!
Edward Small had the movie re-edited and re-released as a musical too, but the less said about that version the better!
Here is a whole bunch of posters created for the movie (the Italians, as usual, produced some humdingers)…
US poster
UK quad posterItalian poster. Okay, that scaly, big creature doesn’t appear in the movie, but this is an amazing painting by Renato Casaro!French poster. This painting is pretty ace too!
Italian poster
US three sheet poster
German poster
Italian insert poster
Poster from Argentina
Thai poster
Ghanaian hand-painted poster
Italian poster. The monsters shown here are very prehistoric-looking!
Belgian poster
Some lobby cards…
Mexican lobby card
Italian ‘fotobusta’ lobby card
DVD and Blu-ray covers…
Region-free DVD sleeve
UK DVD cover
US DVD cover
German Blu-ray cover
UK Blu-ray cover
Newspaper ads…
New York newspaper ad
New York newspaper ad
New York newspaper ad
Some pages from the Dell Movie Classic comic book adaptation. Art by Ed Ashe…
Cover
Pendragon summons his cohorts…
The sea monster is quite different-looking in this comic adaptation
Pendragon transforms!
Jack is triumphant!
Finally, here’s a behind the scenes shot of Jim Danforth animating the sea creature model…
JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS was directed by Don Chaffey, produced by Charles H. Schneer, and featured a great cast, including Todd Armstrong, Nancy Kovack, Honor Blackman, Gary Raymond, Laurence Naismith, Niall MacGinnis (my favourite Zeus!), Patrick Troughton, Douglas Wilmer, Michael Gwynn and Nigel Green (a really good Hercules!)
Harpy alert!
This is one of Ray Harryhausen’s very, very best movies! Boasting a well-paced plot, a wonderful Bernard Herrmann score and memorable stop-motion creatures, including Talos and the Harpies. The many-headed Hydra that guards the fleece is a very well-designed creation and is probably my favourite stop-motion movie beast.
Talos!
The Hydra is a gorgeous-looking critter!
The sword fight between Jason and a couple of his Argonauts versus seven grimacing skeletons is a truly exciting and memorable moment in fantasy cinema. For me, this is the best stop-motion sequence of all time!
Up come the skeletons!
It’s all about to kick off…
Awesome sword fight!
Off with its head!
Amazing stuff. Fantasy adventure movies don’t get better than this!
Here’s a selection of just some of the posters produced for the movie…
US one sheet poster
UK quad poster
French poster
Spanish poster
US one sheet poster
Italian poster
US 70s re-release poster
German poster
Finnish poster
UK quad poster for re-release of Jason and the Argonauts/Mysterious Island. I saw this double bill at the cinema! Woot!
Ghanaian hand-painted poster
Belgian poster
US vertical format poster
Thai poster
A couple of limited-edition posters…
Poster by Killian Eng (he added too many skeletons!)
Poster by Olivier Courbet
Some lobby cards…
Triton!Let’s dance!The Argo!Zeus and HeraI hope he used deodorant…
Some fotobustas (Italian version of lobby cards)…
FotobustaFotobustaFotobusta
Some VHS, DVD and Blu-ray covers…
VHS cover
Japanese VHS cover
UK VHS cover
Another UK VHS cover
US DVD cover
Australian Blu-ray cover
Some Super 8mm box art…
I’ve got this one!
Derann box art for Super 8mm colour/sound reel
Some acrylic paintings by Jamie Chase…
Talos
Harpy
Finally, some Ray Harryhausen concept art for the movie…
Does Sator have fingers that are made from animal jawbones?
Written and directed by Jordan Graham, this low budget horror movie stars Michael Daniel, Rachel Johnson, Aurora Lowe, June Peterson and Gabriel Nicholson.
This poster plays on the automatic writing aspect of the story
An old woman (Peterson) has the gift for automatic writing and endlessly speaks of a being called Sator. Meanwhile, her grandson Adam, a man of very few words, lives in a cabin deep in some moody-looking woods. He is obsessed with what might be lurking amongst the trees, checking his Deer Cam feeds, mulling over his grandmother’s claims that Sator is watching, and having various memories of his family that seem to be bothering him.
Nicely-shot woods
A skull-adorned figure in Adam’s cabin
SATOR is pretty atmospheric, with some impressively-shot footage of forests, mountains, ruined walls and fallen tree trunks, though the plot is just too cryptic. The protagonist, Adam, has to carry a lot of the film on his own, without uttering much dialogue, so it’s unfortunate that Gabriel Nicholson just isn’t quite good enough an actor to emote what Adam is thinking via his eyes and expressions.
Gabriel Nicholson plays AdamAdam hides from the antler people that enter his home
The various outdoor locations are used effectively, there’s interesting use of B&W footage interspersed amongst the colour scenes, the occasionally-seen figures wearing deer skulls and animal pelts look cool, a murder (that includes a burning beard) late in the story is gorily well handled and there’s good use of darkness in some scenes, where a character’s torch can only illuminate a certain percentage of what’s onscreen. So it is definitely a shame that the story itself is too slow-burn, too obscure and confused, with mumbled dialogue early in the movie that is hard to understand.
Deer skull-wearing character seen close-upAdam stands on a tree trunk
Sator lurks in a cave
But, as I said, the film does look wonderful much of the time and some of the cryptic stuff, like close-up shots of a yellow slug on the forest floor and misty/snowy footage of foliage and landscapes, adds an interesting, sombre quality to the production.
A snowy vista
Ah, a poster that uses the ol’ monster-claw-in-the-foreground layout
Also known as TRENCH 11 and THE TRENCH, this Canadian film was produced by Carousel Pictures, directed and co-written by Leo Scherman and stars Rossif (DEAD BEFORE DAWN) Sutherland, Robert Stadlober, Shaun Benson and Ted Atherton.
Big gun!
The movie is set towards the end of the First World War and it concerns a small team of allied troops sent on a mission to explore an underground German bunker that has been used for disturbing experiments.
This wound is nothing to sniff atSwollen-faced victim!
The story introduces the idea of weaponised parasitic worms. It is revealed that the parasites were initially bred by the Germans to kill allied livestock, but the worms jumped species, to infect humans. So a twisted German officer called Reiner (Stadlober) deliberately bred deadlier versions of the worms, planning to use them against Germany’s enemies. The worms, however, got loose in the bunker before he could put his scheme into action…
An autopsy scene involving a worm-infested corpseBarfing up infected vomit into a victim’s mouth! Yuck!When interrogations get lethal
The protagonists soon find themselves dealing with German soldiers infested with the parasitic worms, which resemble writhing white vermicelli/spaghetti!
Squirming killer vermicelli-worms!
DEATH TRENCH is not the most memorable production I’ve ever seen, but I did like this modestly budgeted film. The acting varies and the pacing could definitely be better, but the setting is interesting and you do get the chance to see victims with bulging faces and white worms wriggling from gunshot holes!
He looks ‘swell’!
Finally, some poster/DVD/Blu-ray cover art for the film…
With deaths and quakes occurring around Mount Lincoln, it is eventually discovered that beneath the mountain lurks… Behemoth!
This movie was the 23rd film in the ‘Maneater Series’ (this was the brand name, logo and look given to a series of made-for-television horror films produced by RHI Entertainment, distributed by Vivendi Entertainment). Other movies that were part of the Maneater Series included GRIZZLY RAGE (2007), MALIBU SHARK ATTACK (2009) and WYVERN (2009).
“It’s the size of the mountain!”
BEHEMOTH, which stars Ed Quinn, Pascale Hutton and William Bruce Davis, was premiered on January 15th 2011 on the SyFy Channel, so I guess it’s not a surprise that the acting, production values, script and special effects for this TV movie are not of the highest standard.
A mountain… a monster… a massacre
I’ll be honest: I didn’t focus too much on the storyline & acting, but I did quite like the Behemoth critter itself, once it rises from the ground. The CGI ain’t anything to write home about and during the finale the Behemoth basically just flaps its tentacles around a bit on top of the mountain, before beefy Bradley Cooper lookalikeEd Quinn blows it up (quite easily) with a rocket launcher, but the big, goofy, novel-looking beast is a fun creation. So here are some shots of the Behemoth to enjoy…
A giant monster eye peers through a hole in the mountainside…
…and then a tentacle pokes from the hole: run!
At one point the Behemoth’s head pokes from the ground and gobbles up a character when he falls from the cliff he’s clinging to…
The Behemoth’s knobbly outer skin reminds me a bit of the armoured carapaces of the Zargs in WARLORDS OF ATLANTIS
Here are a bunch of pics of the Behemoth once it finally bursts from the summit of the mountain…
Huge, crab-like legs and tentacles emergeIt that central, toothy section a nod to the Sarlacc?The weird-lookin’ Behemoth crawls to the top of Mount LincolnDoes the Behemoth’s face resemble the monster on the cover of Blue Öyster Cult’s album Cultösaurus Erectus?Ed Quinn aims his rocket launcher at the Behemoth……and he needs to shoot the rocket straight down the monster’s mouth!Boom! Bye-bye Behemoth!A pleased Ed Quinn flies off in a helicopter
Finally, some DVD and VCD covers…
US DVD cover
Japanese DVD cover
Maneater Series triple feature DVD
Hong Kong VCD cover
French DVD cover
Well, this isn’t a very accurate depiction of the monster!
After a spacecraft returns to Earth missing its astronauts, we are shown a young girl on a beach, where she discovers a strange, blue rock. The girl’s mother soon finds her… with her face missing!
We then follow some friends who are on their way to enjoy themselves exploring a cave system. As they change into their caving gear, one of the group discovers a blue rock… and he decides to put it in his backpack. Bad decision, mate.
Italian poster
This sci-fi horror flick was written and directed by Ciro Ippolito (going by the name Sam Cromwell), was released following the success of ALIEN (1979), and was promoted as an unofficial sequel to Ridley Scott’s film, despite having no connection to it.
German poster
ALIEN 2: ON EARTH was released theatrically in Italy on April 11th 1980 as ALIEN 2: SULLA TERRA. It is also known as ALIEN TERROR.
Australian/New Zealand VHS sleeve
The film features Michele Soavi in a co-starring role, before he went behind the camera to become the director of such films as STAGE FRIGHT (1987), THE CHURCH (1989) and CEMETERY MAN (1994). The movie was filmed in Rome’s Cinecittà Studios, California and the Castellana Caves in southern Italy.
UK VHS sleeve
Okay, this flick has an interesting set-up: a group of friends being killed off by alien organisms during a caving expedition. That’s a cool idea. These extraterrestrial things, I assume, arrived in those blue, pulsating rocks, but nothing is explained clearly in this movie.
Cavers get killed after the alien organ-blobs somehow squirm out of the surrounding boulders…
The blobby, bloody, organ-like aliens are only ever seen in close-up, as they erupt from victims or, at one point, issue from inside boulders in the cave. Because we only ever see them up-close or out of focus it’s hard to really know what these creatures are meant to look like in their entirety.
The alien blob-bits are shown in close-up, so you never get a clear view of the whole thing
Yes – another ‘bit of an alien’ seen in close-up in the cave
The film possesses very little logic. In fact, it makes fellow Italian Alien rip-off movie CONTAMINATION (1980) look like a plotting masterclass by comparison! For instance, it’s hard to know why the protagonists who manage to escape from the cave make the decision to go to a bowling alley rather than run straight to a police station! And just how did the entire city become deserted so quickly at the end of the film?
However, as I learnt long ago that logic was never an important factor in many Italian genre movie knockoffs, I kind of expected this sort of plotting! So what did stand out for me in this movie? Well…
UK Blu-ray cover
…I think the best moment comes when a blobby alien bursts from a woman caver’s face, wraps around the throat of a guy dangling from a rope, then causes his head to fall off! Sometimes you have to enjoy the occasional gory, bizarre moment in these illogical flicks!
The dude is hanging upside down with the alien blob around his neck……and then his head drops off!
I don’t think there was a shot of an eyeball within a boulder in the movie, but it’s an interesting image, I guess
Sinbad visits the kingdom of Charak and soon realises that all is not well. He eventually discovers that Prince Kassim, brother of Princess Farah (who Sinbad wishes to marry), has been turned into a baboon by his evil, magic-wielding stepmother Zenobia! In order to turn Kassim back into a human so that he can be crowned Caliph, Sinbad must seek out the alchemist Melanthius, which then leads to a quest to a far-off country beyond the north polar wastelands.
US poster
Prince Kassim has become a baboon, but he can still play chess!
Zenobia has got the eye(s) of the tiger!
Directed by Sam Wanamaker, SINBAD AND THE EYE OF THE TIGER stars Patrick (THE PEOPLE THAT TIME FORGOT) Wayne, Jane (FRANKENSTEIN: THE TRUE STORY) Seymour, Taryn Power and Patrick (JASON AND THE ARGONAUTS) Troughton. With stop-motion effects by Ray Harryhausen, this was the third Sinbad movie released by Columbia Pictures.
Stop-motion showdown!
Zomboid ghouls: yikes!
This colourful fantasy romp features, amongst other things, a fight with three bug-eyed zomboid ghouls, an attack by a (fairly) big bee, a witch (Margaret Whiting) who ends up with the foot of a seagull and a voyage to the lost land of Hyperborea. It’s a shame, then, that TIGER is nowhere near as good as either THE GOLDEN VOYAGE OF SINBAD, which boasted better cinematography, direction, acting, score, script and creatures, or THE 7TH VOYAGE OF SINBAD, which had a livelier sense of adventure, a wonderful Bernard Herrmann score and more striking stop-motion beasties.
Sailing to Hyperborea
Ghouls rise from the flames!
Swat it!
SINBAD AND THE EYE OF THE TIGER has rather a lot of iffy moments, unfortunately: ‘ice’ that looks like it’s been made out of plastic bags, the unblinking, lifeless glass eyes of the sabre-toothed tiger and poor blue screen work seen during the Petra scenes.
However…
…there’s still a lot of stuff I do like: all the baboon and Trog stop-motion scenes are good, the film has an attractive (though wooden) cast, the attack of the giant walrus is enjoyable and Patrick Troughton, as the alchemist Melanthius, acts everyone else off the screen.
Trog and Kassim the baboon become buddies
Bzzzzzzzzzz
Walrus Giganticus!
A lovely fantasy landscape. I wish there had been more shots of this kind in the filmFight!
Gotcha!
The Minoton
It would’ve been better if the Minoton had been given more to do in the film
The mechanical Minoton, animated via Zenobia’s sorcery, looks pretty cool, but has a rather throwaway demise when it just falls under a block of stone: I would have liked to see it fight either Sinbad or Trog.
Complaints aside, the film is charming and watchable – and I still have very fond memories of seeing this movie twice in the cinema, once in a double bill with the Nicholas Hammond SPIDER-MAN (which was released theatrically in the UK).
UK quad double bill poster
Here are some more posters…
Japanese poster
French poster
Australian daybill poster
US advance style 1 sheet – illustration is by Birney Lettick
UK quad poster (with Victor Gadino artwork)
Czech poster
US half sheet poster
UK quad double bill poster
East German poster
Ghanaian hand-painted poster
German poster
Spanish poster
German poster
Foldout movie promo…
Promo coverPromo foldout interiorPromo back cover (illustration is by Victor Gadino)
Lobby cards…
Lobby card – Patrick Wayne, Patrick Troughton, Taryn Power and Jane Seymour
Lobby card… fight!!!Lobby card
Lobby card – Patrick & Taryn
Italian photobusta
Italian photobusta
Super 8 movie box art…
German super 8 movie cover
VHS, DVD and Blu-ray covers…
US VHS cover
UK VHS cover
Japanese VHS cover
US DVD cover
UK Blu-ray cover
Belarusian DVD cover
Pages from the movie pressbook…
Pressbook cover
Page 3 of pressbook
Page 6 of pressbook
Page 8 of pressbook
A comic book adaptation of SINBAD AND THE EYE OF THE TIGER was produced in the UK by General Publishing. This single issue also included a couple of movie features.
The cover. I still own this comic!
Ian Gibson, a regular artist for UK sci-fi comic 2000 AD, provided the nice-looking, detailed illustrations…
Written by Benny Aldrich, drawn by Ian Gibson
Some of Ian Gibson’s original art. I like the very intricate line work!
Tiger attack!
Reaching the gate…
Books and magazines…
The novelisation of the movie, written by John Ryder Hall
Famous Monsters of Filmland #136
Here’s a hand pulled screen print art piece by a veteran of the UK graffiti scene, inspired by the film…
Tom Stewart (Richard Carlson), a jazz pianist living in an island community, is haunted by the ghost of his ex girlfriend Vi Mason (Juli Reding), who he allowed to fall to her death from a lighthouse.
Vi hangs from the top of the lighthouse and Tom doesn’t come to her aid
I like this cheesy B&W ghost flick quite a bit!
Come on, Richard, these are special effects in a Bert I Gordon movie: it’s no good pretending you can’t see them!
TORMENTED, directed by Bert I Gordon (who swaps his usual giant creatures for a ghostly gal this time), features a neat little story that keeps you interested as you watch Carlson becoming ever more paranoid, repeatedly seeing the ghostly Reding… who very often appears just as a head, a hand or footprints. At one point Carlson thinks he finds Reding’s drowned corpse but it becomes just a pile of seaweed: is he losing his mind?
Is Vi a ghost or is Tom seeing things?The ghostly hand crawls across the carpetTom ‘sees’ Vi’s disembodied head… or is it just a vase of flowers?
There’s an enjoyable soundtrack that is jazzy with creepy moments, director Gordon’s daughter Susan is pretty good as young sis Sandy, the special effects are very simple yet quirkily effective in their own way and, well, TORMENTED has a novel vibe all its own.
The special effects are not THAT special, but I like them!Ghostly face in a photograph!
Nick the blackmailing beatnik ferryman is played by Joe Turkel
Lugene Sanders plays Tom’s fiancée Meg HubbardTom Stewart is tormented!
Juli Reding, as the vengeful spirit Vi, looks like she had a fun time in her role, playfully harassing Richard Carlson’s character Tom throughout the film…
…”Tom Stewart killed me! Tom Stewart killed me!”
All together now: “Tom Stewart killed me! Tom Stewart killed me!”
Here are some colourful posters for TORMENTED…
US poster
Italian poster
German poster
US poster
DVD covers…
US DVD cover
French DVD cover
Killer Creature Double Feature DVD cover
Finally, some lobby cards…
Lobby card
Lobby card
Lobby card
This Mexican lobby card adds some blood!
Devoted to every kind of movie and TV monster, from King Kong to Godzilla, from the Blob to Alien. Plus monsters from other media too, including books and comics.